Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 2 de 2
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Nitric Oxide ; 9(4): 211-6, 2003 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14996428

ABSTRACT

The clinical use of the widely used anticancer drug doxorubicin is limited by a dose-dependent cardiotoxicity. Doxorubicin can be reduced to its semiquinone free radical form by nitric oxide synthases (NOS). The release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) from doxorubicin-treated neonatal cardiac rat myocytes was used as a model of doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity. The NOS inhibitors N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) and N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA) protected myocytes from doxorubicin as did their non-inhibitory enantiomers D-NAME and D-NMMA. Thus, these agents did not protect by inhibiting NOS. L-NAME, which does not act at the reductase domain of NOS, also had no effect on the production of the doxorubicin semiquinone by myocytes. Nitric oxide (NO) EPR spin trapping experiments showed that L-NAME reacted with various biological reducing agents to produce NO. Ascorbic acid was highly effective in reacting with L-NAME to produce NO, while glutathione, NADPH, and NADH were much less effective. Thus, these guanadino-substituted analogs of L-arginine likely protected through their ability to slowly produce NO by reaction with intracellular ascorbic acid. Thus, some caution must be exercised in their use. NO may exert its protective effects either by directly acting as an antioxidant or through some other NO-dependent pathway.


Subject(s)
Antibiotics, Antineoplastic/toxicity , Arginine/analogs & derivatives , Doxorubicin/toxicity , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Myocytes, Cardiac/drug effects , Nitric Oxide Synthase/antagonists & inhibitors , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Ascorbic Acid/pharmacology , Benzoquinones/metabolism , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Free Radical Scavengers/pharmacology , L-Lactate Dehydrogenase/metabolism , NG-Nitroarginine Methyl Ester/pharmacology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Stereoisomerism , omega-N-Methylarginine/pharmacology
2.
Free Radic Biol Med ; 33(2): 266-75, 2002 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12106822

ABSTRACT

The iron chelating hydroxypyridinone deferiprone (CP20, L1) and the clinically approved cardioprotective agent dexrazoxane (ICRF-187) were examined for their ability to protect neonatal rat cardiac myocytes from doxorubicin-induced damage. Doxorubicin is thought to induce oxidative stress on the heart muscle, both through reductive activation to its semiquinone form, and by the production of hydroxyl radicals mediated by its complex with iron. The results of this study showed that both deferiprone and dexrazoxane were able to protect myocytes from doxorubicin-induced lactate dehydrogenase release. Deferiprone quickly and efficiently removed iron(III) from its complex with doxorubicin. In addition, this study also showed that deferiprone rapidly entered myocytes and displaced iron from a fluorescence-quenched trapped intracellular iron-calcein complex, suggesting that in the myocyte, deferiprone should also be able to displace iron from its complex with doxorubicin. It was shown by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy that under hypoxic conditions myocytes were able to reduce doxorubicin to its semiquinone free radical. Deferiprone also greatly reduced hydroxyl radical production by the iron(III)-doxorubicin complex in the xanthine oxidase/xanthine superoxide generating system. Together these results suggest that deferiprone may protect against doxorubicin-induced damage to myocytes by displacing iron bound to doxorubicin, or chelating free or loosely bound iron, thus preventing site-specific iron-based oxygen radical damage.


Subject(s)
Antineoplastic Agents/toxicity , Doxorubicin/toxicity , Iron Chelating Agents/pharmacology , Myocytes, Cardiac/drug effects , Pyridones/pharmacology , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Cell Survival/drug effects , Cells, Cultured , Deferiprone , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Fluoresceins/metabolism , Free Radicals/metabolism , Indicators and Reagents/metabolism , Iron/metabolism , L-Lactate Dehydrogenase/metabolism , Myocytes, Cardiac/metabolism , Oxidation-Reduction , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Razoxane/pharmacology
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...